Affiliation:
1. School of Environmental Sciences, University of LiverpoolJane Herdman Building, 4 Brownlow Street, Liverpool, UK, L69 3GP
2. EnQuest plc, Annan HousePalmerston Road, Aberdeen, AB11 5QP, UK
Abstract
AbstractWireline and seismic acoustic impedance imaging show that the marine part of the clastic Brent Group reservoir in the Heather Field, northern North Sea, contains much calcite cement in the flank parts of the structure. The non-marine Ness Formation and crest parts of the structure contain negligible calcite cement. This localized calcite cement has led to relatively poor reservoir performance since first oil in 1978, although a new suite of wells has boosted production with plans to keep the field active until 2030. Understanding the origin and distribution of calcite cement would help the development of more realistic reservoir models and boost production rates through optimum well location. We have thus used a suite of techniques, including standard point counting, SEM-EDS mineralogy, BSE microscopy, fluid inclusion thermometry and stable isotope analysis, to develop new and improved models of calcite distribution. Calcite seems to have attributes of both early and late diagenetic cement. A 30–40% intergranular volume in calcite cemented beds seems to support pre-compactional growth but high-temperature fluid inclusions and the presence of primary oil inclusions suggest late growth. Much calcite may have developed early but it seems to have recrystallized, and possibly undergone redistribution, at close to maximum burial or had a late growth event. Calcite cement probably originated as marine-derived micrite, bioclasts or early marine cement but adopted the isotopic characteristics of high-temperature growth as it recrystallized. Quartz grains have corroded outlines in calcite-cemented areas with one sample, with 79% calcite cement, displaying signs of nearly total replacement of quartz grains by calcite. The flank localization of calcite cement remains to be explained, although it could be due to primary depositional factors, early diagenetic loss of calcite from crestal regions or late diagenetic loss of calcite from crestal regions. Controversially, the growth of calcite seems to be associated with quartz dissolution, although the geochemical and petrophysical cause of this remains obscure. Diagenetic loss of quartz from sandstones cannot easily be explained by conventional modelling approaches and yet seems to be an important phenomenon in Heather sandstones.
Publisher
Geological Society of London
Subject
Geology,Ocean Engineering,Water Science and Technology
Reference90 articles.
1. Thermal generation of carbon dioxide and organic acids from different source rocks
2. Diagenetic and sedimentary controls on porosity in Lower Carboniferous fine-grained lithologies, Krechba field, Algeria: A petrological study of a caprock to a carbon capture site
3. Early discordant diagenesis in the Brent Group, Murchison Field, UK North Sea, detected in high values of seismic-derived acoustic impedance
4. Influence of texture on porosity and permeability of unconsolidated sand;American Association of Petroleum Geologists Bulletin,1973
5. Benbaccar M. , Fritz B. , Sommer F. , Bazin B. & Brosse E. 1995. Geochemical modelling of mineral diagenesis in the Brent sandstone reservoirs, Alwyn South and Alwyn North areas, East Shetland Basin, North Sea. Water–Rock Interaction, 437–440.
Cited by
20 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献